Earlier this year Sachi Parker, daughter of iconic Oscar-winning actress Shirley MacLaine, published a memoir, “Lucky Me,” about her life with — and without — her mom. In it she writes abouther unusual, exotic and jet-setting lifestyle.

Written with Frederick Stroppel, the book, according to its drumbeating, “unveils a life truly like no other, full of double crosses and confusion, culture clashes and Hollywood politics, psychological trickery and betrayal.”

Now Parker and Stroppel have also created a solo stage show based on the book.

“Lucky Me,” starring Parker, will premiere at the Off Broadway Theatre, in New Haven for a two-week run, with a preview May 30, opening May 31 and continuing through June 9. The small theater at 41 Broadway is located behind Toad’s Place on York Street.

Douglas Moser directs and Joanna Keylock is producing the independent commercial run. Set and lighting design is by Andrew Rubenoff and costumes by Deighna DeRiu.

The Los Angeles-born Parker was raised by her father Steve Parker in Tokyo. In the book she writes about attending boarding schools in England and Switzerland, working in Hawaii and France and being a flight attendant for Qantas Airlines before settling down with her mother in Malibu.

Parker is also an actress and her film credits include “Stick,” “Back to the Future,” “About Last Night,” “Peggy Sue Got Married,” and “Scrooged.” In 2008, she starred in the Japanese film, “The Witch of the West is Dead.”

Stroppel, is a New York-based playwright, whose work includes the off-Broadway comedy “Fortune’s Fools,” “Actor!” and “Small World,” which had its premiere in January in Newtown.

Moser has directed in New York and regionally, including staging the premiere of Stroppel’s one-act plays “Danger: People at Large,” starring Jack Klugman and Brett Somers. He directed the film version of one of these short plays, “Glacier Bay,” starring James Noble and Dorothy Bryce.